Word: elson
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...cover a story as old as Easter, TIME'S Religion Editor John T. Elson flew to Basel, Switzerland, to talk to the man on this week's cover. Theologian Karl Earth. They talked, among other things, of Calvin, Mozart and Reinhold Niebuhr ("a great man. but if only he had an inner ear, through which he could hear what Mozart is saying, he wouldn't be so serious all the time"). Barth cheerfully remarked that a Barthian usually smokes a pipe; an orthodox theologian, cigars; and liberals, cigarettes. He offered Religion Editor Elson-a cigar...
Along with the photographs of the cardinals in their flowing red outfits goes Associate Editor John T. Elson's fascinating account of the history of the cardinals. The story is built around last week's happenings at the consistory, but we had already done our homework first-and we believe that homework plus headwork plus headlines make the best combination...
With two minutes gone in the second overtime, Crimson right halfback John Elson a hard outside--past the Andover goalie to give the freshman soccer team a 2-1 victory yesterday...
Hearing of the Douglas survey, some prominent MWs have given their own opinions. The wife of President Eisenhower's Presbyterian pastor, Mrs. Edward L. R. Elson, is impatient with any talk about the difficulties involved: "I think they're all dividends, myself." Mrs. John Wesley Lord, wife of the Resident Methodist Bishop in the Boston Area, agrees that "the satisfactions are unique and abundant. A minister's wife has a whole congregation to love and call hers. And she's also blessed with the services of the best doctors, dentists, and other professional...
...Dutchman was not a new production: it used the spectacular, old-fashioned sets done by Charles Elson in 1950. Musically, the production was markedly better than nine years ago. The early-Wagner score-shot through with popular Italian and French influences-was rousingly conducted by 29-year-old Thomas Schippers. In the role of the Dutchman (equated by Wagner with both Odysseus and the Wandering Jew) Baritone George London was convincingly demon-ridden, his voice fresh, passionate but controlled. In the comparatively minor role of Daland, the Norse sea captain, Bass Giorgio Tozzi-convincingly costumed in turtleneck sweater, jacket...